Environmental tobacco smoke and ischemic heart disease
Abstract
Cohort and case control studies show a 30% excess risk of ischemic heart disease in nonsmokers whose spouses smoke compared with that in nonsmokers whose spouses do not smoke. There is a nonlinear dose-response; the excess risk from actively smoking 20 cigarettes/day is only 80%. Large cohort studies of active smoking support the nonliner dose-response (the excess risk in smokers of 5 cigarettes/day is about 50%). Animal studies show a pronounced vascular effect of environmental tobacco smoke. In experimental studies passive and active smoking have similar effects on platelet aggregation. The collective evidence supports a significant effect of low dose tobacco smoke exposure in causing ischaemic heart disease.
aDepartment of Environmental and Preventive Medicine, Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine, Barts and The London, Queen Mary’s School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of London, London, UK